The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, October 02, 1906, Image 4

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THE ATLANTA GE0KU1AJN. TUIBUM.*, OLTUUfcK Z, Mb M DENTAL WORK AT COST COLLEGE SEASON NOW OPEN A large number of parlies ran be waited on at reg ular college prices—“Cost of Materials." No green students are allowed to enter this school, but dentists • •f several years* experience come to learn the newest things In the business, fn this place you get the bene fit of skilled work AT COST. No botch work by in experienced beginners. Gas, Air and Local Application for PAINLESS Extraction of Teeth FREE Remember the Place. ATUNTA POST-GRADUATE DENTAL SCHOOL, Take Elevator. 2d Floor Steiner-Emery Bldg., Atlanta, 6a. Dr. W. S. Conwy, Mgr. Dr, Conway also will attend to hie private practice. flow Our Acme Double Flint Coated Asphalt Roofing Excels Is made from the best Wool Felt. Saturated and coated under a new process with Asphalt. Is a rubberlike (densely compressed) Roofing Felt. Coated on both sides with Silicate. Resists the. action of vapor, acids and fire. Not affected by heat or cold. The roofing that never leaks. Easily affixed. The experience of twenty years proves It to bo the BeBt Ready Roofing on the market. Put up In rolls 32 Inches wide and 40 feet 6 Inches long, containing 108 square feet, wrapped In heavy casing. APPROXIMATE WEIGHTS. 3-Ply, 80 lbs. per roll, Complete. 2-Ply, 70 lbs. per roll, Complete. 1-Ply, 60 lbs. per roll, Complete. Samples and Full Particulars Free. Also 3, 3 and 1-ply Tarred Roofing Paper. Sheathing and Insulating paper. CAROLINA CEMENT CO., ATLANTA, GA. DOUBLOONS A THRILLING NOVEL OF MYSTERY, TRAGEDY AND A STOLEN FORTUNE By EDEN PHILLPOTTS AND ARNOLD BENNETT (Copyright, 1306, by Eden fhlllpatts end Arnold BrnnetD CHAPTER XXXIV. World Politics. Forty-eight hours later, on a perfect tropic morning outside the little palm- fringed bay of Georgetown, the "Wan derer," with Captain Chetwode in a fussy and excited mood, was making ready to leave those shores. Nothing had been seen or heard of Walter Pol- PHARMACY LAST CHANCE. Our sale* of summer Shoes Is Mill on, but must end soon. Only a few more days. Our Repair Department is rapidly increasing. Call ua up and we will send for your Shoes and return them in good order. CARHART SHOE MANUFACTURING CO., Bell ’Phone 1355. 11 VIADUCT PLACE, Bet. Whitehall and Broad WANTED A BOOK-KEEPER AND STENOGRAPHER . who Htt ammo the SOUTHERN SHORTHAND ATLANTA. GA. ^ y The Leedlna Business School of the South. OOK-KEEPING, Shorthand and com* fW piste English Departments. Over JsJ lo.oooorsdustes; 600 students snnu* ally. Receives from two to live application* drily for ofilca assistants. En dorsed by Governors, Senators, Bankers, f irofesslonsl and business men. Its Dip- nmslss sure passport to a food position. Enter now. Catalogue free, llentton this paper. Address A. C. BRISCOE, Prsit. or LW. ARNOLD, V.Prest., Atlants. 8s. A sc/enrff/c frtsrassf tm Whiskey, Opium, Msr« phi nt, Cttalaa, Chltral, Tehecte and Ntnratlht, sfa sr Nerve fiftausflss. The Only Keiley Iniif. lutein Georgia. 229 Woodward Ava., ATLANTA, 6A. MORPHINE SUFFERER RECOVERS FROM DRUG W. M. Thompson, a lineman, who lives at 390 Ormond street, was aide to leave the Grady hospital Monday afternoon after having suffered a close escape from death by morphine po|. aoning. He declined to say whether his overdose had been an accident or an attempt at suicide. Thompson was found In McAfee’s drug stole. In Decatur street, Sunday night and was sent to the hospital. He BALLOTS DIFFER! MAY CAUSE TROUBLE There's a difference between the "straight" and the "official” Democratic tickets-and the fact that on the form er T. (’. Crenshaw In slated for the railroad commission, while S. G. Mc Lendon Is the nominee on the latter, is not the only one. While It was probably not Inten tional the make-up of the Crenshaw ticket Is likely to confuse the voters of Fulton county In the selection of their commissioners of roads and revenues. Here's the way that part of the Crenshaw ticket is arranged: For County Commissioners, C. L. ANDERSON, ED V. CARTER. (Strike Two.) R. F. MADDOX, T. M. POOLE, G. P. PIERCE. Now, the location of the "strike two” leaves the voter in doubt as to wheth er he is to strike the names above or below those words. Messrs. Anderson and Carter are the regular nominees, the former for the country and the hitter for the county at large. The other three are candidates for commissioner from the county at large, the place made vacant by the resignation of Colonel Hubert L. Cul berson to take the office of county treasurer, to which he was nominated In the last primaries. Ordinary Wilkinson lias got all the ballot boxes ready to send out to ih polls Wednesday. Tin* voting in the court of appeals primaries will be done in band boxes charitably donated by an Atlanta hat store. lexfen and Coco, and the "White Rose” had not reappeared. The only other vessel of size in the neighborhood of Georgetown was the "Pelagae," the Russian ship which had already an chored there when the "Wanderer" ar rived. Now Just as the crowd of har bor boats were pulling away from the yacht's side and the gangway was be ing drawn, up. Captain Chetwode, who was on the bridge and conscious of the loss of two nights' sleep, observed that an extremely smart cutter was on its way from the "Pelagea" to the "Wan derer," and that in the sternsheets of the cutter sat a man in the naval uni form of a Russian captain. He noticed also that the "Pelagea," hitherto pass ing for a private craft, was flying the blue cross on a white ground which nly ships of the czar's navy are en titled to fly. Captain Chetwode delayed giving the commands which were on the tip of his tongue; he gazed blankly nt the cutter as it shot over the glittering emerald of the Caribbean. He had already had more adventure that: he bargained for, and the prospect of further complica tions lid nothing to soothe him. Horace, too, had the cutter under ob servation, and he it was who demanded of the officer In the sternsheets as the boat drew alongside: "Do you want to come -up?” The officer replied that he did, "I’ll go and tell Uncle," said Hor ace. running off. And the gangway, half raised, was lowered again. Thus ft Is, in a manner tlie reverse of cere monial, that the most solemn Incidents begin. Captain Chetwode was so as tonished nt the turn of the affairs that fie did and said nothing until the offi cer was on board and greeting Sir An thony Dldring and Philip Congleton Masters with the elaborate punctilio of a diplomat who is conscious of a high mission. The officer tendered a card. "Le Captain Porflry Platonlch Kir sanov." And speaking English too correctly for an Englishman, he beggerl the honor of an interview with Sir An thony In a private place. In three minutes Sir Anthony, with his own hand, was offering whisky to Captain Klrsanoy in the yacht's smok ing room, while Philip attended to the cigarettes. Tony had indicated that Philip’s presence would be essential. Roth these young men tried to look as If visits from Russian captains were everyday episodes in their careers. It Is possible that they succeeded mod erately well, but In reality they were somewhat startled, if not frightened. They recognized the Russian captain anti* in some strange way the sight of him stimulated a certain activity In their consciences. He was the man they had seen nt the Grand Etang on the morning after the discovery of the boxes. and the Irtish, the Kamschatka, the Russ, and the Ural were destroyed. Ah! Gentlemen! ... If order had reigned In our unhappy fleet the cof fera would from the first have been on the Ural. Sometimes chance rewards negligence in a strange way. "What occurred to the Anadyr dur ing the •time of her absence? Few people know, and those who know will not tell all they know. Her captain died—or he was killed. There was a mutiny, one of several secret mutinies that broke out after the battle of the Japan sea. The Anadyr encountered one of the pleasure yachts hired by the Imperial government, under the French flag, to witch the movements of the Japanese fleets. You will call to mind the law case concerning these yachts last month. The coffers were trans ported to the yacht, under the orders of some of the secret revolutionaries who were to be found In both crews. It had been decided that the contents of the coffers were to be used for the revolutionary cause. But it was neces sary to conceal them for a period. The thieves knew that,* owing to the la mentable defects of our beaurocracy, they had only to wait In order to be forgotten. On board the yacht was a Scotchman who suggested the Grand Etang as a hiding place, and received a splendid reward for superintending the affair. No Russian, I regret to say It. could be trusted.* Philip was about to make a remark, hut the captain entreated him with a fine gesture to be patient. And he resumed. "Among the depos itaries of the secret was a young doc tor named Isaac Palovsky, who soon afterwards had the misfortune to find himself In Odessa during the riots. To save himself from the police, he as sumed the uniform of a gendarme, and this was his ruin, for he was caught by a mob of laborers, who quitV natur ally refused to believe that he was not really a gendarme, and he was stoned death. This was on the quays. He fell, dying, Into a dinghey, and the dlnghey belonged to the steamship Volga, the name of whose captain was Pollexfen. But he survived twelve hours and confided to Captain Pol lexfen various secrets of the revolu tionary cause.” "Well, I’m—!" Tony exclaimed. "Yes," said Captain Kirsanov polite ly. "I have to add that some of this Information soon reached the ministry )f marine at St. Petersburg. Three- pmrters of a million English pounds sterling were not to be scorned even by a government which can still bor- at five and a half per cent, gen tlemen. I was given private Instruc tions to make an Inquiry. A yacht was put at my disposal. The Inquiry has been completed. In the course of it I naturally learned about the death of aptaln Pollexfen. After that, I caine here to—to wait and see. Among the points as to which I lacked Informa tion was the exact location—that ex tremely important detail. It would astonish you, perhaps, to know how much I have discovered as to the rela tions between yourselves and the yacht •White Rose,’ and even as to the orlgl- Idlty, If I may so express my self, which caused Captain Pollexfen to disclose his secret to his brother Walter.” "Excuse me," said Philip. us to give you the boxes? That’s about w hat It comes to.” "I am asking you to restore the cof fers to their owner, his Imperial ma- f Brown & Catlett j Brown & Catlett 1 and your risks I am authorized to^pay the sum of 75,000 pounds sterling.” There was a pause. The young men exchanged glances. "It seems to us strange,” said Philip at length, "that a demand has not long ago been made formally through your ambassador in London." "Ah! My dear sir," returned Klrsa nov. "If it has not. the reason Is sim pie.” He sighed. "The reputation of some of the highest personages In Russia Is involved In the affair. Do not press me. Let me say only that a formal diplomatic explanation of all the facts would necessitate the downfall of at least one man who would prefer civil war in Russia to his own dis grace. I can produce my credentials, signed by Vice Admiral Blrleff, and I shall have the honor of doing so when I have received your reply. May 1 re spectfully ask for your reply within two hours? If it should be In accord ance with my expectations, I shall have the privilege of showing to you some thing which will Interest you.” "What Is that?" "The key* of the coffers," said Cap tain Kirsanov. "With the carelessness characteristic of our race, the man who transferred the coffers to the yacht left the keys on the Anadyr. I have them. The ministry of marine buys Its cof fers in London, and I assume, there fore, that you have not yet succeeded In opening them." With a gentle Slav smile, Captal Kirsanov rose. ‘Gentlemen"—he flourished. Tony w hispered to Philip. "My friend says,” Philip announced "that, subject to proper verification and so forth, the answer to your proposal will be in the affirmative, agree with him.” "Oh, yes,” Tony broke in Impulsive ly. "We don’t want two hours to decide that we aren’t a pair of thieves. But no bunkum; you know!" Th,e Rus slan did not apparently comprehend the phrase. And when Captain Kirsanov had gone—"Well, I’m"—Tony asserted again. "It Is Just a shade out of the ordl nary. Isn’t It?” Philip concurred. CHAPTER XXXV. What Philip Was to Gain. In the meantime the traffic up and down Klngsway had increased; Lon doners were tearing to use It, as Philip and Mary discovered, on a bright afternoon, when, by one of those sheer accidents that will occur even to the most serious young men, he hap pened to overtake her In the street. They had been In England somewhat less than a month. The principal item:* of news which had greeted them on the arrival of the yacht In the Solent was that the bodies of Walter Poliex- fen and the negro Coco had floated to the surface of the Grand Etang and been discovered—but far from each other. Pollexfen had a bullet in the nape of his neck and It was not of drowning that he had died. But there were no external marks of injury on Coco, and the doctors said that he had i. r.xcu.sp me, sam I'nuip. uo i drowned The mimnnultlnn hope I may not be delaying your gather that, according to you Captain t b hut n coca having Inspired the dejwtrture," said Kirsanov, thanking Philip with a wondrous smile for a match. _ ,, . Not nt nil, not nt nil,” Tony replied. I wish to discuss with you, If you permit, a question of extreme rtellcn- ey,” Kirsanov proceeded. He looked round to see If nil apertures were closed and drew his chair a little closer to p chair of the Knffllsbmen, •Indeed!" said Philip. •The question of your canto,’ said Kirsanov. "Pardon my indiscretion." ••Our cargo?" Tony exclaimed, as if to convey that he knew nothing of any "Your cargo," said Kirsanov. "You have on board—again I pray you to pardon my Indiscretion—two hundred and thirty-seven steel coffers. Is It not "Well," Tony murmured, blushing, As a matter of fact, we have." "You have had them brought down by night from the Grand KtahS. where you found them submerged—It Is two evenings ago. Without doubt you per formed the transport during the night for private reasons Into which It would he clumsy on my part to enquire. He smiled. . , •■You do not know the history of those coffers,” he resumed, "You <lo not know precisely what they contain, nor how they came to he where you found them, nor to whom they belong. If you will accord me the permission, was found to he suffering from mor phine. w hloh he obtained at another drug store. ANNOUNCEMENTS. For County Commissioner. T. M. POOLE. F. E. PURSE THE PRINTER PRINTING OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS VJ 16 1-2 E. MITCHELL ST. ATLANTA, GA. . ..... here to tell you the*e thing**. 1 "Please do,” Mild Sir Anthony. "We should like to know very much," said Philip, and Philip also was blush ing. t’aptaln Kirsanov blew a long lance of Mtnoke before proceeding. "On the 27th of May," said he, speak ing more slowly. "I was on the Rus sian man-of-war, the Oslabla. It was five minutes to three in the afternoon. Tin* water was rushing In through a hole in her side. Her two forward compartments were wrecked. She be gan to heel. She heeled more and more. IlnVe 1 mentioned that we were In the Straits of Tsushima, and that the greatest naval battle In the history of civilization was in progress? Such was the ease. I received reports that first one magazine and then another was flooded. •At Inst we were obliged to shut, down the magazines on the port side and to use only the starboard maga zines. Then water poured on board in Immense volumes. 1 entered a battery and saw that the end was come. I gave orders on my own authority to stop the ammunition hoists and dyna mos. Then l ordered the crew to aban don ship, and l went to the captain. At this moment the left side of the bridge touched the water and the deck rose vertically. The captain was clinging to a rail. It Is a pity, l said to him, that nearly .half a million Im perials should go down with her. For. unknown to anyone except Admiral Rojestvensky. the captain, myself and some minor officials of the pay depart ment, the ‘Oslabla carried—if l may say the financial resources of the Bal- fleet. The money was naturally supposed to be elsewhere. The cap- aln surprised me by replying: ‘You ire mistaken, Porflry; I had every eof- er transported to the ‘Anadyr' three hours ago.’ He was then swept away bv a wave—the sea was very rough and the weather very foggy—and drowned. 1 remembered nothing else till I awak ened on board the Japanese cruiser the ’Kasuga’ the next day. He sipped at the whisky. ••Now. as you may possibly recollect, the Anadyr ’disappeared utterly for rather more than one month, when she suddenly arrived at Madagascar. Everybody was thinking she had been sunk' She was an auxiliary cruiser. I Out of six of her class she alone es caped. The Kostroma was captured, i Pollexfen knew to whom these boxes belonged? Because, If so, the Inference Is that he meant to steal them.” "Not so," Kirsanov replied smooth ly. "He had no Intention to steal. There was a split In the ranks of the revolu tionaries—as usual—’’ Kirsanov smiled slightly—"and Captain Pollexfen’s Eng lish sympathies, which were naturally against the Russian government, had been engaged by Palovsky on behalf of one of the two revolutionary par ties. He was to forestall the other party, take the coffers to a certain Adriatic port, nnd receive 10 per cent for his pains." "Not a had reward," said Tony. "The same reward Is now offered by the Russian government, whom I have the honor to represent. I have placed the facts of the case before you. You are, I assume, gentlemen adventurers. I am sure that you are not robbers, and I do not suppose that any politi cal sympathies you may have will im pair your sense of Justice." "Then," said Tony, "you are asking PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE r POLICIES A re the most up-to-date and progressive C ontracts to be found, as they protect the I nsured, during his life time, F rom loss of INCOME on account of B llness, Accident or TOTAL DISABILITY, C ombined with the usual payment at death. M any conditions arise, such U ness happening T° th * Insured, adding an U nusual expense In addition to causing A loss of Income, which make the L ife Pottcy of the PACIFIC MUTUAL a blessing. L ife Insurance haa become a necessity I n the business and social world, every man F eeling the need of protect ing hla E state while he haa the pow er to do so. “FOUR IN ONE” it the “INSURANCE THAT INSURES," Information upon application. J. CLEMENTS SHAFER, MANAGER, 413—414 Peters Building, ATLANTA, GA. that Coco, having inspired the arch plotter with confidence, had deliberately shot him from behind. It was the essential irony of things that Pollexfen, after deceiving the cleverest men on two continents for nearly half a century, should at the end have been deceived by so simple a being as Coco—a poor creature In whose head there was room only for one Idea at a time. The finding of the corpses rejuvenated London’s interest In a series of crimes destined to be come classical; It made Horace a hero in his new school; It gave a passing thrill to Horace’s mother; It enused an enormous amount of inconvenience to Mary Pollexfen, Philip and Sir An thony. The police, now that there wa* nothing to do. Imparted Into the af< fair an energy which was astounding. The three friends were examined nnd cross-examined, watched, observed, shadowed and spied on, to such a point that their nervous systems would have been Justified In breaking under the strain. Then suddenly the activity ceased; the C. I. D. devised other dis tractions for Itself; the Pollexfen af fair took the rank of ancient his tory The tangled remains of ft consisted of some seventy thousand pounds ster ling, which had been paid to Sir An thony and Philip by the emissary of the Bear at Fort de France, in the presence of the French governor Martinique. The money was a rich source of discussion during the voyage home. TonV would not take any of It; he was too wealthy for such trifles, which he pretended were nothing to him, and perhaps his vanity was to be excused. Philip argued fhat In right It belonged to Mary, as the descendant of her father. Mary argued that the winning of it was due wholly to Philip’s enterprise. Neither was really averse to the arrangement by which it was ultimately divided equally between them, for after all even the highest- mjnded persons do not refuse to touch thirty-five thousand pounds out of sheer sentimentality. Now ns Philip and Mary were walk ing clown Klngsway that June after noon a neswboy, and then another newsboy, ran up Klngsway screeching and howling the late edition of The Evening Record, arid waving contents- bills which bore the curt legend "Wai ter Pollexfen’s diary. Special." Philip bought the yellow sheet, and tried to open it in the breeze. This occurred precisely opposite to the new tea shop which one of the greatest of after noon tea companies had then recently opened half way between Strange street and Aldwych. They accepted the shelter of the tea shop, which was nearly empty, being peopled only by elaborately musllned young women In reposeful attitudes. They found a cor ner, and on a marble-topped table Phil ip spread out the newspaper. The Record had been spending money In the West Indies. In fact. It had en gaged a ''special" out there from the staff of a Jamaica paper. And here was its reward. In the shape of ex tracts from a diary which had been discovered in the pocket of Walter Pol lexfen’s coat. The special had cabled from the diary, and The Record thus added another, to the long catalogue of « "scoops." Philip glanced down the double- leaded lines, printed in black type across two columns of the page. ••Really!” he murmured. One of the musllned ladles dropped some earthenware heavily on to the table, and there floated on to the news paper a little square ticket with the ords: 2 Teas «d. 2 Suit 4d lrtd. "Really!" Philip repeated Impatient- Furniture Bargains For This Week HAVE a store full of rare bargains in new Fur niture. No doubt you have been considering the pur chase of some piece of Furniture for some part of your home. If you want an odd piece or a complete set of Furniture—you can save money at this store. See Our “Specials” for This Week, “Everything for the Home” Brown & Catlett Furniture Company, 62-64 N. Broad St. ly, brushing aoide the paper. "You must read this yourself. Miss Pollex- fen.” And he twisted the paper round for Mary * to peruse. She read: "This Masters Is simple, but he is not a fool—two different things. I am a fool. I ought to have killed him. Like all great men 1 am capable of sublime follies." "In future years, when the study of what Is called crime has been placed on a scientific basis, my conduct of this superb affair from the moment when I realized that my beloved broth er was dead will be regarded as decid edly in advance of its time. I have lived too soon. The manner In which I have mingled fiction with fact in my accounts of the matter to various persons, not to mention my superb creation of the log of the ’El Legato,’ Is worthy of a greater age. It Is wast ed on the twentieth century. In the twentieth century it is Indeed danger ous." "I nearly dropped Masters overboard last night. Why did I not do so? He's infectious. He's making me old-fash ioned. My sole reason for not drop ping him overboard was that I had promised him his life? What a rea son! Ye gods! What a reason!” "I’ll go to South America after this, and get myself appointed president of some republic. Brazil seems indicated. As dictator of Brazil I could make history on a wholesale scale." "I lost my head for a second when I saw the bold baronet and that girl close to me on the balcony. Such things have never happened to me be fore. I guessed at once that the wo man asleep In the restaurant belonged to the party. An agreeable piece of goods, I should imagine. She has charm. Twenty years since I was In love. Always with plump women." "Foolish trip to the Wanderer to night. But It amused me. I see I shall have to dispose of Masters, after all. The curious thing Is that it will cost me a pang.” "Niggers are the same everywhere. Incapable of a fixed purpose, like kids. Why do they breed so rapidly?" "Masters’ boyish anger when I told him about the propeller vfas most in teresting psychologically. Now, should have said”— Here the diary broke off. The Record promised Its readers the unabridged Journal In a fortnight’s time. Mary folded up the paper, and gazed at Philip In silence. "What horrible dangers you ran!" she said. "Ah!” she breathed. "Money! Is It worth’’— His glance rested with quick sym pathy on her mourning dress, and then roved round the room to make sure that no one was within hearing. "Dear friend!” he whispered, In a voice sud denly passionate. "Forgive me. Some time, in a year perhaps, I might ask for something else. I”— lolently blushed, and added ab ruptly: "Shall we go?" Her smile enveloped him like a ca- ss, and there was subtle acquiescence In her attitude ns she hovered near him while he paid the bill at the desk. Lower down, nt the stage door of the Metropolitan, a man and a woman getting into a motor car. They were so absorbed In each other that they did not notice the oilier couple on the pavement. "Josephine tells me she shall leave the stage when she marries him," said Mary. And when do you mean to return to It?" Never.” The End. CONVENTION IN FIRST REASSEMBLES FRIDAY. Special to The Georgian. Savannah, Ga., Oct. 2.—Preparations are being made here for the reassemb ling of the First congressional district convention next Friday, as it is now certain that Judge Samuel P. Adams will decline the nomination. Judge Adams Is now in Atlanta and will give his answer to the committee appointed to tender him the nomination on his return Wednesday again and the dead lock will continue. It Is not now be lieved that either side will accept an other "dark horse," and it looks as if the election will be held without a Democratic nominee In the field. DELEGATES APPOINTED TO AMERICUS MEETING. Special to The Georgian. Columbus, Ga., Oct. 2.—Delegates, to the state convention of Daughters of the Confederacy, which meets in Amerlcus the latter part of this month, have been appointed by Lizzie Ruth erford Chapter of this city as follows; Miss Annie C. Henning, regent; Mrs. J. S. Harrison nnd Mrs. Paul D|:- mukes, with the following alternates: Mrs. Mary Strupper, Mrs. G. T. Bran non, Mrs. L. F. Garrard, Mrs. O. S. Jordan, Mrs. Jane Martin. The delegates to the general conven tions are Mrs. Lee Blanchard, Mrs. G. T. Brannon. A TALK WITH “OLD BOOZE.” Old Booze, Now talk to me A bit. We "parded” long— You-nnd me— But quit. You pulled me Down, and down, and down; Besmeared my Better life; Made beggars of My child And wife. And now would you So cruel be— Would you Rebel Against a prohl’s pleading, And send my soul To hell? Say, Boozer Lay down your fight, Join forces with A man Who once was in Your power— A man who knows that He is right; And knows that you Devour The good Intentions Of men so Weak— At least they do not utter That noble word, "Resist;” But wander round From town to town, And When they meet A fellow man Of better class, they’re Hissed! I plead, And while I beg I pray, ! i t: Keep the sale Away, away! Thomaston, Ga. W Welcome, Druggists! While attending the Druggists’ convention, would pay you to give some thought to this Label Placed on your printed matter it will be a hid for patronage of Organized Labor. Atlanta Typographical Union P. O. Box 266.